2,800 Investors Devastated as Crypto CEO's $9.4M Ponzi Scheme Collapses

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Friday, Nov 14, 2025 4:03 pm ET1min read
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- Travis

, CEO of Wolf Capital, was sentenced to 5 years for a $9.4M crypto Ponzi scheme defrauding 2,800 investors.

- Funds were misused for luxury purchases and

, with victims including retirees and young professionals.

- The DOJ highlighted the case amid a global crypto fraud surge, including a $6B Chinese scheme and $1.5B ByBit theft.

- Prosecutors condemned Ford's "market pressures" defense, as 2025 saw over $2.17B in U.S. crypto scam losses.

A U.S. court has sentenced Travis Ford, the CEO of Wolf Capital Crypto Trading LLC, to five years in federal prison for orchestrating a $9.4 million cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme that defrauded nearly 2,800 investors. Ford, 36, of Glenpool, Oklahoma, also faces over $1 million in forfeiture and $170,000 in restitution,

. The sentencing, delivered on November 14, 2025, follows Ford's January 2025 guilty plea to conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Ford operated Wolf Capital from January 2023 through August 2023, promoting the firm as a high-yield cryptocurrency investment platform. He

(equivalent to 547% annually) using a professional website and social media campaigns. Court documents reveal that Ford and his co-conspirators made these claims knowing they were impossible to sustain. Instead, investor funds were misappropriated for personal gain, including luxury purchases, gambling, and real estate, while the scheme collapsed in August 2023 when withdrawals were blocked.

The DOJ emphasized that Ford's actions left investors—many retirees and young professionals—devastated financially. "Ford did not actually invest most of the money as promised," the agency stated. "Instead, he used new money from recent investors to pay returns to earlier ones, a classic Ponzi structure." The case was investigated by the USPIS, which

to build the case against Ford.

The ruling adds to a global surge in cryptocurrency fraud. Earlier this year, a Chinese woman dubbed "cryptoqueen" was sentenced to 11 years for a $6 billion

Ponzi scheme, while North Korean hackers were linked to a $1.5 billion theft from ByBit exchanges. The DOJ recently announced a Scam Center Strike Force to combat such schemes, particularly those originating in Southeast Asia and China.

Ford's case underscores the risks of unregulated crypto investments. "

in 2025," noted one source, citing over $2.17 billion in losses in the first half of the year alone. Prosecutors criticized Ford for blaming "market pressures" for his crimes during sentencing, calling it an attempt to deflect responsibility.

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